1862 – Ulster Bank, Waterloo Place, Derry
Fine Italianate bank building by Belfast architect Thomas Jackson. Jackson was architect to the Ulster Bank,
Fine Italianate bank building by Belfast architect Thomas Jackson. Jackson was architect to the Ulster Bank,
Opened in 1862, by the Ulster Hall Company, the hall’s purpose was to provide the expanding city of Belfast with a multi-purpose venue of sufficient size.
From The Dublin Builder: “Yielding the consideration of magnitude, there is none other – with certain comparatively trifling and remedial exceptions – in which the ‘Maiden Citie’ will suffer by comparison with any other city or town in Ireland.
A iron-framed double-decked bridge constructed 1859-63. Replaced in 1931.
Occupying one side of the street, this large shirt factory of McIntyre Hogg and Co.
The original castle was first built around 1474. The current Lough Eske Castle was reconstructed in the 1860s by the Brooke family on the site of their medieval castle.
An earlier house on the site was built c.1795 and remodelled and extended for John Grubb Richardson, possibly incorporating earlier fabric.
Constructed by the Irish North Western Railway in 1862-63, and later extended by the Great Northern Railway which took over the INWR in 1883.
The station opened on 3 September 1863 on the Finn Valley Railway line from Glenties to Stranorlar.
Whiteabbey was the first major stop outside Belfast with the main station building on the up line constructed around 1863 with a canopy added fifty years later.
NOTE: Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - this will only display location of buildings on this page.